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Cause of death? Lack of insurance

Posted Sep 28 2009, 03:59 PM by Karen Datko
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A new Harvard study estimates that nearly 45,000 Americans die each year because they don't have health insurance -- and that's after other factors like income and unhealthy behaviors are taken into account.

"Deaths associated with lack of health insurance now exceed those caused by many common killers such as kidney disease," an article by the Cambridge Health Alliance reports.

The study says the uninsured have a 40% higher risk of death than people who have private health insurance -- like the insurance you get through your job. Or, to put it another way, a person dies because of a lack of insurance every 12 minutes.  

Of course, some people neglect their health. But many, we suspect, don't see a doctor because they're afraid of the cost. Doctor visits and tests can add up to an intimidating amount, even if you're uninsured but have a good income. A CNN story put a human face on some of these avoidable deaths -- a freelance cameraman, a self-employed mother of two, and a 25-year-old woman who worked in a movie theater.

So we had to wonder: Have you put off visits to the doctor because of financial considerations?

Overall, 15.4% of Americans don't have health insurance. The study breaks it down state by state, (.pdf file). For example:

  • In Texas, where just under 30% of people lacked insurance in 2005, annual deaths attributed to being uninsured was 4,675.
  • Here in Montana, the percentage of uninsured was 19.4%, and 147 people paid the ultimate price.
  • In Florida, where 26% were uninsured, the death toll attributed to lack of insurance was 3,925.

Also consider that the number of deaths blamed on lack of insurance is 2.5 times higher than it was in 2002, due to several factors. The study found that:

  • More people are uninsured. The U.S. Census said 46.3 million people were uninsured last year -- and since then millions of people have lost jobs.
  • The safety net for the uninsured has larger holes, as nonprofit hospitals and clinics have closed.
  • The quality of care for those with insurance has improved. "We doctors have many new ways to prevent deaths from hypertension, diabetes, and heart disease -- but only if patients can get into our offices and afford their medications," Dr. Andrew Wilper, lead author of the study, said.

"We're losing more Americans every day because of inaction ... than drunk driving and homicide combined," Dr. David Himmelstein, a co-author of the study, told Reuters. Himmelstein and his wife, study co-author Dr. Steffie Woolhandler, founded Physicians for a National Health Program.

Related reading:

A survival guide for the uninsured

It's not health care reform unless ...

How to fix health care

Look abroad for cheaper health care

Comments

 

I'd like to see a story about all the people who died while insured. I am sure the number exceeds those who die and do not have insurance.

The beauty of losing Americans to lack of health insurance is that we gain new Americans everyday from the success of an open border. Americans are a renewable resource that will never be in danger of extinction.

The main cause of heart attacks in the United States is people opening their doctor bill when it comes in the mail (that is, IF it comes in the mail.)

See people, insurance prevents death. I knew there was a good reason to get it. Make sure you eat your broccoli, don't smoke, exercise everyday, and get insurance and you'll never die. Chairman Obama is such a wonderful man. He has found the Fountain of Youth for America.

Oh yeah, and let's get rid of guns too, they cause a lot of death.

Per the current Newsweek article, the 45K is a bogus figure.  

www.newsweek.com/.../216299

from that link:

The 45,000 figure cited by Baucus is itself an unreliable statistical construct built on many assumptions. It's based on a study of 9,004 people ages 17 to 64 who were examined between 1988 and 1994. By 2000, 351 had died; of these, 60 were uninsured. The crude death rates among the insured (3 percent of whom died) and uninsured (3.3 percent) were within the statistical margin of error. After adjustments for age, income and other factors, the authors concluded that being uninsured raises the risk of death by 40 percent. They then extrapolated this to the entire population by two techniques, one producing an estimate of 35,327 premature deaths and another of 44,789.

This whole elaborate statistical edifice rests on a flimsy factual foundation. The point is not to deny that the uninsured are more vulnerable (they are) or that extra insurance wouldn't help (it would). The point is that estimating how much is extremely difficult. Advocates exaggerate the benefits. Remember: Today's uninsured do receive care.

Remember, figures lie and liers figure. Next time explain how that figure came about. Of course you wanted to sway opinion your way.

I don't get it.  I know alot of families who can't afford insurance and they get free health care.  They are seen by doctors a whole lot more than I am.  I have insurance but I can't afford what the insurance won't pay so I don't go to the doctors' unless I absolutely have to.  I think the people in greatest need are those who have the most basic health plans with the highest deductables.  They get no help from anyone because they "have" insurance.  If you are poor enough you get all kinds of assistance - food stamps, health care, fuel assistance, etc.

Insurance is often provided for the children of the poor but generally not for the parents.  As for the absolute idiot of a poster (named "whatever") that states that "I'd like to see a story about all the people who died while insured. I am sure the number exceeds those who die and do not have insurance.", well, duh.  There are a lot more insured people than uninsured people, so more people with insurance die than the uninsured.  The point of this article, you moron, was to talk specifically about deaths ATTRIBUTABLE to a lack of insurance (i.e., preventable by basic medical care).  You would be hard pressed to concoct a convincing argument for how having insurance CAUSED someone's death.  

To the other imbecile, John Baez, yes, insurance can prevent death.  If someone has severe pneumonia, getting proper care can keep it from being lethal (which it can easily be, if neglected).  Its just an example of one of many conditions that could kill if neglected.  In addition, any number of chronic conditions (asthma, colitis, bronchitis, etc.) can kill if the prescription regimen is not maintained.  These things won't get paid for without insurance.  Also, yes, exercise and avoiding smoking will make you live longer.  

Government handouts kill people, too.  They sit on the couch all day in front of their big-screen TV, eating pizzas & ice cream bought with food stamps.

This is what people like Glenn Beck just don't get! They rail against imagined "death panels", while remaining silent about the tragedy of standing by and allowing hundreds of thousands of children and adults, who, due to no fault of their own, die for lask of insurance. We MUST somehow bring our nation up to most of the rest of the industrialized world, by seeing that EVERYONE is insured against dying for lack of medical care! Pre-existing conditions must not be a barrier to health insurance! Each of us pays $1,000. per year to cover the use of emergency rooms by the uninsured. It takes 2% of the total cost to administer medicare, but 26% of total cost to administer private health insurance Can you see where the first step needs to be?

I am so sick of hearing the statement of "no fault of their own" and the excuse of each individuals situation being unique and unadvoidable. If we want to make sure everyone has health care than mandate it. Make it illegal for any thitd party (your employer) to provide your insurance and we as individuals and families will make our own decisions, some bad, some good, but at least they are our decisions and not the Insurance companies or the governments. There is no doubt that a family making $12k a year will be subsedized in this process. Most americans will not have an issue with this. Social Security has proved that! Put the decisions back into the individuals hands and cost will go down also. This is the "clean" definition of capitalism .

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